Convert underused buildings to housing
Voters could reasonably understand this as a mayoral commitment to convert underused buildings to housing during the next administration.
Can the mayor actually do that? · 294 promises · 28 topics
The inventory separates what Eskamani promised from what City Hall controls, what implementation requires, what funding is identified, and what remains unanswered.
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Showing 24 of 294 matching promises · 294 published total
Voters could reasonably understand this as a mayoral commitment to convert underused buildings to housing during the next administration.
Voters could reasonably understand this as a mayoral commitment to expand tiny-home and modular housing during the next administration.
Voters could reasonably understand this as a mayoral commitment to offer affordability development incentives during the next administration.
Voters could reasonably understand this as a mayoral commitment to allow more missing-middle housing during the next administration.
Voters could reasonably understand this as a mayoral commitment to reevaluate minimum parking rules during the next administration.
Voters could reasonably understand this as a mayoral commitment to explore a local topa policy during the next administration.
Voters could reasonably understand this as a mayoral commitment to provide eviction legal representation during the next administration.
Voters could reasonably understand this as a mayoral commitment to launch a city-backed home-repair grant during the next administration.
Voters could reasonably understand this as a mayoral commitment to explore zero-interest and forgivable repair loans during the next administration.
Voters could reasonably understand this as a mayoral commitment to expand weatherization incentives during the next administration.
Voters could reasonably understand this as a mayoral commitment to expand housing first and treatment access during the next administration.
Voters could reasonably understand this as a mayoral commitment to add drop-in centers and shelter capacity during the next administration.
Voters could reasonably understand this as a mayoral commitment to create neighborhood financial-empowerment centers during the next administration.
Voters could reasonably understand this as a mayoral commitment to ensure rental and utility assistance access during the next administration.
Voters could reasonably understand this as a mayoral commitment to pilot income-enhancement initiatives during the next administration.
Voters could reasonably understand this as a mayoral commitment to pursue living wage city certification during the next administration.
Voters could reasonably understand this as a mayoral commitment to create a living-wage employer certification during the next administration.
Voters could reasonably understand this as a mayoral commitment to fund worker legal aid during the next administration.
Voters could reasonably understand this as a mayoral commitment to invest in employment wraparound services during the next administration.
Voters could reasonably understand this as a mayoral commitment to build education-to-employer career pathways during the next administration.
Voters could reasonably understand this as a mayoral commitment to expand first-time-buyer assistance during the next administration.
Voters could reasonably understand this as a mayoral commitment to support community land trusts and cooperatives during the next administration.
Voters could reasonably understand this as a mayoral commitment to condition incentives on community benefits during the next administration.
Voters could reasonably understand this as a mayoral commitment to continue pedestrian-safety investment during the next administration.
270 matching promises remain.